WDRQ

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WDRQ
Broadcast area Detroit, MI
Branding "93.1 Doug FM"
Slogan We Play Everything
First air date July 9, 1947
Frequency 93.1 (MHz)
Format Variety Hits
ERP 20,000 watts
Former callsigns WLTI (1985-1996)
WDRQ (1972-1980)
WDRQ-FM (1980-1985; 1996- )
WDEE-FM (1970-1972)
WJBK-FM (1947-1970)
Owner ABC Radio (Being Sold to Citadel Broadcasting)
Website www.931dougfm.com

WDRQ is the callsign for the Detroit, Michigan, radio station 93.1 Doug FM. The station is currently owned by ABC Radio, although a sale to Citadel Broadcasting is pending.

The station's current slogan is "93.1 Doug FM - We Play ... Everything."

Contents

[edit] History

Doug FM originally came to Detroit in 1972 as Detroit's first FM talk radio station. Prior to 1972, the station had been WJBK-FM and then WDEE-FM, mostly simulcasting the programming of then-sister AM 1500. (WJBK-AM was Detroit's first top 40 station, playing hit music from 1956 to 1964.) Soon after WDRQ moved to become a top 40 station, chalking up top 10 ratings and seriously challenging market leader CKLW until they jumped on the all-disco bandwagon in late 1978.

The move was not received well in Detroit, and WDRQ tumbled out of the top 20 within a few months. Despite plummeting ratings, WDRQ stuck with all-disco through 1979, returned to top 40 in 1980, then adopted an urban contemporary format (with danceable mainstream hits mixed in) in 1982. The station rebounded nicely, chalking up higher ratings than ever before, including a #2 showing in the summer of 1982.

"Continuous Music - 93FM WDRQ" was a success, and the opening of "Beverly Hills Cop" features an advertisement for this version of WDRQ on a city bus. The urban format lasted until 1985 when it was replaced by the light rock station WLTI "93.1 The Light FM." WLTI initially positioned itself as a cross between more uptempo AC competitor WNIC and beautiful music WJOI, featuring a blend of soft hits and oldies from artists like Barry Manilow, the Carpenters, Anne Murray, Olivia Newton-John, and Frank Sinatra. By 1994, most of the easy MOR artists were gone and WLTI had become more contemporary, but the station could never match WNIC for dominance in the AC market.

In July 1996, WDRQ returned to the 93.1 frequency as a Top 40 music station and would remain so for nine years. Initially the station called itself "The New DRQ: Detroit's Station For Women." With only an announcer used for on-air bumper promos and without any disc jockeys, the station chiefly played a random mix of programmed dance and pop music from late 80s and early 90s, with some new music factored in sporadically. More current dance-oriented Top 40 music was added to the playlist into the fall. By early 1997, a lite mix of pop-friendly R&B and hip-hop music was also adopted to further cement the stations mainstream hook. With this being the first time a Top 40/Dance music station had been on Detroit radio since the implosion of WHYT-96.3 two years earlier, DRQ immediately attracted a large listening audience upon its re-launch. Thus, the station quickly abandoned the 'for women' angle, steadfastly recruited a line-up of radio personalities, and began calling itself "Detroit's Dance Music Station" (later "Today's Best Music," then "Today's Hit Music.")

By 2000, the station had evolved into more of a mainstream Top 40 (albeit still more geared toward playing dance music than other like-formatted stations in the area) and was eating away at its adult-leaning Top 40 competitor WKQI (95.5). By 2002, both WDRQ and WKQI were leaning very heavily toward Rhythmic CHR. For a time, WDRQ consistenly defeated WKQI in the ratings, but after Clear Channel relaunched WKQI as "Channel 9-5-5" in February 2002, WKQI once again surged ahead of DRQ, which saw its ratings and revenue slumping big-time.

Due to continued poor ratings, at 1 p.m. EST on April 1st, 2005, ABC Radio (who holds the 93.1 FM FCC radio broadcasting license in Detroit) abruptly pulled WDRQ off the air, without any warning being given to the listeners or employees. Some thought this was a bad April Fools prank. This, though, was no joke. ABC Radio replaced WDRQ with the variety hits format - "93.1 DOUG FM - We Play…EVERYTHING!" The genre setup for the music played on the new iteration is very broad like 96.3 WDVD, 100.3 WNIC and Magic 105.1, combining a wide variety of songs from the 1960s through the 2000s ranging from Led Zeppelin to ABBA to Laura Branigan to Nickelback.

While many former DRQ listeners were both confused and disgruntled over the format change, DOUG FM eventually attracted its own following and began absorbing market share of the other aforementioned radio stations, though its overall ratings have stayed more or less flat since the format change.


[edit] Former WDRQ Air Personalities, 1970s-1980s

  • Early/mid-1970s jocks on the original WDRQ included: Joey Ryan, Al Casey, Bill Bailey (formerly of WLS Chicago, now Program Director/PM Drive at WLHT Grand Rapids, MI), "Rockin'" Ron Baptist, Ken Levine ("Beaver Cleaver"), Don Cristi, Howard Hoffman, Ted Ferguson ("China Jones"), Jonnie King, Bill Vogel (as "Jack O'Neill," later a longtime morning fixture at WKHQ in Northern Michigan as "The Captain"), Mick Rizzo, Brian White
  • Some late 1970s DRQ jocks: Tom Jeffries, Scott Moore, Eddie Rogers (formerly of CKLW)
  • Some 1980s DRQ jocks: Kim Carson (now at WLHT), Chris O'Brien, Kevin O'Neill (now mornings at WNIC)

[edit] Former WLTI "Lite FM" Air Personalities, 1980s-1990s

  • Eddie Rogers
  • Jeff Silvers
  • Barry Zate

[edit] Former WDRQ Air Personalities, 1990s-2000s

  • Tic Tak (moved to WIOQ in Philadelphia, then back to Detroit to move to 93.1 DRQ's rival station WKQI, but was fired after it was discovered he had criminal charges pending against him in another state)
  • Jake Edwards (now Mid-Day host on WDRQ's sister station 96.3 WDVD)
  • Dave Fuller (who was recently morning show host on WDTW 106.7FM when they also abruptly changed formats.)
  • Hugh Holesome
  • Rachel Hunter (now on mornings on WYCD FM 99.5)
  • Jason "The 300-Pound Intern"
  • Lisa Lisa(also the announcer of The Detroit Shock of the WNBA and a veteran of the former WHYT during the '80s and early '90s)
  • Man @ Large
  • Jay Towers (hosted DRQ's "Jay Towers and the Morning Revolution," now the host of Motor City Middays on WKRK in Detroit)
  • Clark Kent (now the Monkeyboy on WYSP, Philadelphia)
  • Keith Curry
  • "Joe Mama" and drag queen "Trixie DeLuxxe" (the first morning show on the "new" DRQ of the late 1990s)
  • Brent Carey
  • Jevon Hollywood
  • Su-Anna ( now nights at WSM-FM The Wolf in Nashville )

[edit] Media (2003)

[edit] Old Logo

old logo

[edit] Sources

FM Radio Stations in the Detroit / Windsor Market (Arbitron #10)

By Frequency: 88.1 | 88.1 | 88.1 | 88.1 | 88.3 | 88.3 | 88.7 | 89.1 | 89.1 | 89.3 | 89.5 | 89.5 | 89.9 | 90.9 | 91.3 | 91.5 | 91.7 | 92.3 | 93.1 | 93.5 | 93.9 | 94.3 | 94.7 | 95.1 | 95.5 | 96.3 | 96.7 | 97.1 | 97.9 | 98.7 | 99.5 | 100.3 | 101.1 | 101.5 | 101.9 | 102.7 | 102.9 | 103.5 | 103.9 | 104.3 | 104.7 | 105.1 | 105.9 | 106.7 | 107.1 | 107.1 | 107.5 | 107.9

By Callsign: CBE | CHYR | CIDR | CIMX | CJAM | CJBC | CKSY | CKUE | W206BI | W208BB | WAHS | WBFH | WCBN | WCRZ | WCSX | WDET | WDMK | WDRQ | WDTR | WDTW | WDVD | WEMU | WGPR | WGTE | WHFR | WHMI | WHPR | WHTD | WIOT | WJLB | WKQI | WKRK | WMGC | WMUZ | WMXD | WNIC | WOMC | WPHS | WQKL | WRCJ | WRIF | WRVF | WSAQ | WSDP | WUOM | WVMV | WWWW | WXOU | WYCD

Past stations: WJR-FM | WHYT | WPLT

See also: Detroit (FM) (AM)